Wednesday, September 24, 2014

I decided to divide up my blog posts on my gardens and green house into 3 parts. My last blog post showed images of my green house or Zen House as I like to call it. These images here are outside around the the Zen House.

Pots of plants, including a bonsai gingko and a weeping Japanese maple tree near my front porch.

"Silence is essential for deep transformation. It allows the practice of conscious breathing to become

deep and effective. Like still water that reflects things as they are, the calming silence helps us to

see things more clearly; to be in deeper contact with ourselves and those around us."

----- Thich Nhat Hanh

Small pond with gold fish

"I walk into a poem and walk out someone else." Nayyirah Waheed

Large stone water basin

Bamboo water feature with stone lantern and laughing Buddha with Japanese maples and

deer ferns

"The only people who ever get anyplace interesting are the people who get lost."

Henry David Thoreau

Large water basin with stone Carp, stone temple, stone rabbit with Japanese maple and gingko bush

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

September... a pause for summer to say an awkward and lingering good-by and for autumn, sitting on a hill top, a jug of cider in one hand and a bunch of wild purple asters in the other, waiting to say hello. (NYTimes) As summer comes to an end, it is that time of year for me to post images of my Zen gardens and my Zen greenhouse. I have decided to divide my images into 3 posts because I have so many to share. This first post is all about my Zen house... what I call my outdoor decor.

Torii gate entrance to my Zen House

"...to walk without destination and to see only to see..."

--- Uta Barth

Follow the stone path

"Your sacred space is where you find yourself again and again."

--- Joseph Campbell

Some of my bonsai in front of my Zen House

"The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes but in having new eyes"

--- Marcel Proust

One of the shelves inside my Zen House

"May my mind come alive today

to the invisible geography

that invites me to new frontiers,

to break the dead shell of yesterdays,

to risk being disturbed and changed."

---John O'Donohue, from a morning offer

A new birdcage, inside is a Japanese kokedama or moss ball with a Rabbit Fern

"Landscape consists in the multiple, overlapping intricacies and forms that exist in a given space at a moment in time." Annie Dillard, Pilgrims at Tinker Creek

Kokedama or Japanese moss ball with Rabbit Fern

"Landscape is the texture of intricacy, and texture is my present subject... What do I make of all this texture?" Annie Dillard

Another Kokedama, or moss ball with large wooden paddle

"The texture of the world, its filigree and scrollwork, means that there is the possibility for beauty here, a beauty as inexhaustible in its complexity, which opens to my knock, which answers in me a call I do not remember calling, and which trains me to the wild and extravagant nature of the spirit I seek." Annie Dillard, Pilgrims at Tinker Creek

This is a Rose de Jericho, a type of desert moss, which dries up into a tight ball without water. When water is added, it will open up and burst into life, until the water dries up again.

A water feature inside my Zen House

A corner of the Zen House

A round beach rock with a bee who passed away and has been sitting on this rock all summer